I've had a
It took me most of yesterday to clarify matters to that point. I was informed I'd have to provide copies of the initial tests and evaluations (from five different specialists and/or medical practices) as background material for the new evaluation. No, the bureaucrats wouldn't provide copies from their files - I had to get them from the centers that had performed them. Copies from third parties were not acceptable.
Grrr!
This morning, I started trying to locate the records. The fun began when I was informed that the evaluation center that performed my final assessment had been sold shortly afterwards, and the specialist who conducted the assessment had retired. The corporate HQ of the hospital chain concerned initially said they couldn't help me locate records; but when I pressed the issue, I was put through to a lady who told me that I could contact another company that was now responsible for all the records from that facility. So far, so good.
I contacted that other company, by telephone message and via a form on their corporate Web site. The telephone operator returned my call to say (initially) that she had no record of my case at all, and I'd have to get back to Company #1 to find out what they'd done with them. She later phoned back and left a message saying she had located my name in the records after all, but that I still had to phone Company #1 and give them a long numerical code, so that they could locate the records in their system, confirm they were about my case, then authorize Company #2 to release them to me.
Meanwhile, an initial e-mail response to the same query via the Internet led to someone trying to sell me physical therapy services at an establishment run by Company #2. When I demurred, and explained what I needed, the person concerned told me that she couldn't help me. However, a couple of hours later, someone else from Company #2 e-mailed me to say that they could help me, and would I please fill out the attached HIPAA form and return it so they could find and release my records to me?
When I tried to get the lady on the other end of the telephone and the lady on the other end of the e-mail (both from Company #2) to talk to one another, the system melted down in chaos. I'm still not sure that they haven't entered into some sort of fusion reaction with each other, consuming my records in the process. I'll have to continue tomorrow morning, trying to get both halves of the conversation to give me a single, common answer as to how to get the information I need.
Then I have to repeat this process for four more medical specialists and/or practices. The only consolation is that the records were compiled before Obamacare set in. If they were post-Obamacare, they'd probably have been sold to China already for use as landfill.
I suddenly understand H. L. Mencken's perspective a great deal better . . .
*Sigh*
Peter
